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There is no "blue blood," only red blood. Deoxygenated blood is dark red and oxygenated blood is bright red. Deoxygenated blood (dark red) picks up oxygen at the lungs in the alveoli. The high concentration of oxygen in the lung cavities diffuse into the low concentration of oxygen in the blood. The oxygen binds to the hemoglobin and becomes "oxygenated," and continues to the systemic circuit.

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14y ago
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14y ago

There is no blue blood in the human body. In anatomy pictures, the peripheral veins are colored blue to help visualize the difference between oxygenated and deoxygenated blood. That being said, deoxygenated blood (usually colored blue in anatomy pictures) comes from the tissues of the body. It will have relatively less O2 and more CO2 than arterial blood (which is generally colored red in anatomy pictures). The actual color difference is this: Oxygenated blood will appear bright red, deoxygenated blood will be a more dull red. Interestingly enough, the pulmonary arteries are the only arteries in the body that are supposed to carry deoxygenated blood. Also, the pulmonary veins are the only veins that are supposed to carry oxygenated blood from the lungs back to the heart. Remember that when you are coloring in your anatomy diagrams, or you will likely be marked down. The difference between vein and artery is whether the vessel carries blood to or away from the heart. If the vessel carries blood toward the heart, is it a vein, if it carries blood away from the heart, it is an artery. This is not to be confused when considering the cardiac arteries and veins. The heart also needs everything that other muscle cells need (oxygen, sugar, calcium, etc.). So the heart also has arteries that technically carry blood "toward" the heart, but they are there to feed the heard muscle.

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Q: Where does blue blood come from before entering the heart?
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Related questions

What color is blood going to the heart?

When the blood is going to the heart it is blue. When it is going away from the heart, it is red.


What do you think would happen if the blood entering the heart mixed with the blood leaving the heart?

if blood entering the heart gets mixed with blood leaving the heart the the blood leaving the heart will get poluted. the blood entering the heart is poluted when it enters the heart, the heart cleans it up; so when the blood leaves the heart it is clean so if it gets polluted the person may get sick and this leads to his/her death.


Blood in the veins is usually what color?

Purple or blue The blood becomes red when it gets contact with oxygen this is why when you get blood drawn it looks purple or blue


Why do your vains look blue?

your veins look blue because your blood has no oxygen, when your blood is oxygenated it is red and when it is deoxygenated it is blue. veins carry blood toward the heart and are often blue while arteries carry blood away from the heart and are filled with oxygenated blood.


What is the color of blood going to the heart?

Blue


What color is the blood after it leaves the part of the heart?

The color of the blood is blue because the heart has oxygen coming threw at the same time to make it blue.


What color is the blood that is going away from the heart?

blue


Blood going to the heart is what in color?

Dark blue


What is the color of the blood going back to the heart?

blue


Which part of the heart contains blue blood?

Venous blood travels from the body to the heart in veins and it goes to the right atrium.


Why is the blood that leaves the heart red?

Because it is oxygen rich...the blood that returns to the heart has a blue-ish tinge contains little to no oxygen, and that's why it is blue... Hope this helped! :)


Why some times blood look blue on the veins?

Blood becomes blue when it is deprived of oxygen. These veins are returning de-oxygenated blood to the heart, making them appear blue.